Saturday, December 13, 2008
Thursday, December 11, 2008
Ok, so it's been a week. Not that there haven't been a zillion things going on I'd have loved to have had time to get in to; but with one of the hot topics of the last week being interest rates; I've had no time to do anything but try to run figures and get things going for as many people as possible. But, this was worth taking a break for; I have some more things to get posted; so hopefully by Friday night.
Friday, December 5, 2008
Treasury's Plan for Mortgage Rates Could Be Costly- TIME
Thursday, December 4, 2008
WANT SOME GEEKY, ECONOMIC OPTIMISM??
In Italy, Feminism Out, Women As Sex Symbols In
An excerpt of the whole transcript:
Sexism In Italy
Today, Italy has the lowest percentage of working women in Europe. Only 2 percent of top management positions are held by women — that's even behind Kuwait — and only 17 percent of the members of parliament are women — less than in Rwanda and Burundi.
Television has become women's prime showcase.
"To sell your body for a calendar, for a career, is not considered now so bad for many young women," says social scientist Elisa Manna, who has studied this issue's impact on Italian society. "This kind of attitude is connected to television, because they have this kind of model in every hour of the day."
Tuesday, December 2, 2008
Friday, November 28, 2008
More (fresh) skeletons in Lieberman's closet
10 REASONS WE'RE DOOMED: Black Friday Edition
This is thanks to brother-in-law David Turner; very appropriate for today!
Friday, November 21, 2008
Our First Geek President
Thursday, November 20, 2008
Sarah Palin does TV interview while turkeys are slaughtered in the background.
Watch the video."
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Flickr: Election Night Photo Album
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Monday, November 17, 2008
PRINCE is "anti-gay"????????
When asked about his perspective on social issues—gay marriage, abortion—Prince tapped his Bible and said, “God came to earth and saw people sticking it wherever and doing it with whatever, and he just cleared it all out. He was, like, ‘Enough.’ ”
Since the Palin discussion won't go away.........
Friday, November 14, 2008
Joe the Plumber’s latest small business? Apparently: himself.
You Know Your President Is Black When......
...he paraphrases Sam Cooke in his acceptance speech, has an office of urban policy, and gives Ebony the first photo shoot.
I'm sure it also has something to do with the fact that Johnson publications, Ebony's parent, has deep ties in black Chicago. You know all them bougie South Side Negroes run together!
UPDATE: J Starr points us to this dope, dope cover from Ebony
Tuesday, November 11, 2008
Monday, November 10, 2008
Auschwitz Plans Discovered
The documents are undergoing close examination. If confirmed as genuine they would adjust the timeline of the planned Holocaust. Historians believed the start of the genocide campaign was January 20 1942 when top Nazi officials met at the lakeside resort of Wannsee, west of Berlin, and concocted the "final solution". One of the drawings has a date that precedes the conference by eight months. The rest..
Friday, November 7, 2008
Dave Barry on Obama
He keeps going.
What will be done about Lieberman?
"Reactions to the Election"
Basu: "Wave of hope lifts spirits, flags around the world"
I've never been a flag-flier, though I've had citizenship in two different countries. I know that people have valid and admirable reasons for flying the flag, but it felt somehow immodest to me, like a public display of affection, or a boast of "Mine is better than yours." Maybe if we had a world flag, it would have come easier.But on two occasions, I've felt tempted to hoist the U.S. one - after Sept. 11, 2001, out of solidarity with a wounded America, and since Tuesday, out of pride.
An overwhelming, unsquelchable pride began to well up listening to Barack Obama's glorious acceptance speech and seeing the throngs of joyful, tear-streaked faces on TV, and it has hardly let up since. John McCain, in a gracious concession speech, called it a day of special pride for African-Americans. But really, it belongs to every American. Just as it took men to give women the right to vote, and a white president to sign the emancipation proclamation, it took people of every demographic to look past race and vote for change.
But tearing down that racial barrier is only one part of what makes this election so transformative. There are so many victories wrapped up in one. There's the triumph of intelligent discourse and inquiry over blind adherence to some doctrine. Let's hope now we can rebuild a culture in which a good education is not denounced as elitist but applauded and aspired to for everyone.
This is also a win for our relationship with the world. (to read the rest of the article, click here or I have posted it in full in the comments of this post).
Robinson, "Morning in America"
I almost lost it Tuesday night when television cameras found the Rev. Jesse Jackson in the crowd at Chicago's Grant Park and I saw the tears streaming down his face. His brio and bluster were gone, replaced by what looked like awestruck humility and unrestrained joy. I remembered how young he was in 1968 when he stood on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., moments before King was assassinated and hours before America's cities were set on fire.
I almost lost it again when I spoke with Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.), one of the bravest leaders of the civil rights crusade, and asked whether he had ever dreamed he would live to see this day. As Lewis looked for words beyond "unimaginable," I thought of the beating he received on the Edmund Pettus Bridge and the scars his body still bears.
I did lose it, minutes before the television networks projected that Barack Obama would be the 44th president of the United States, when I called my parents in Orangeburg, S.C. I thought of the sacrifices they made and the struggles they endured so that my generation could climb higher. I felt so happy that they were here to savor this incredible moment.I scraped myself back together, but then almost lost it again when I saw Obama standing there on the stage with his family -- wife Michelle, daughters Malia and Sasha, their outfits all color-coordinated in red and black. I thought of the mind-blowing imagery we will see when this young, beautiful black family becomes the nation's First Family.
Then, when Michelle's mother, brother and extended family came out, I thought about "the black family" as an institution -- how troubled it is, but also how resilient and how vital. And I found myself getting misty-eyed again when Barack and Michelle walked off the stage together, clinging to one another, partners about to embark on an adventure, full of possibility and peril, that will change this nation forever.
It's safe to say that I've never had such a deeply emotional reaction to a presidential election. I've found it hard to describe, though, just what it is that I'm feeling so strongly. (my emphasis, L.T.)It's obvious that the power of this moment isn't something that only African Americans feel. When President Bush spoke about the election yesterday, he mentioned the important message that Americans will send to the world, and to themselves, when the Obama family moves into the White House.
For African Americans, though, this is personal.
I can't help but experience Obama's election as a gesture of recognition and acceptance -- which is patently absurd, if you think about it. The labor of black people made this great nation possible. Black people planted and tended the tobacco, indigo and cotton on which America's first great fortunes were built. Black people fought and died in every one of the nation's wars. Black people fought and died to secure our fundamental rights under the Constitution. We don't have to ask for anything from anybody.
Yet something changed on Tuesday when Americans -- white, black, Latino, Asian -- entrusted a black man with the power and responsibility of the presidency. I always meant it when I said the Pledge of Allegiance in school. I always meant it when I sang the national anthem at ball games and shot off fireworks on the Fourth of July. But now there's more meaning in my expressions of patriotism, because there's more meaning in the stirring ideals that the pledge and the anthem and the fireworks represent.
It's not that I would have felt less love of country if voters had chosen John McCain. And this reaction I'm trying to describe isn't really about Obama's policies. I'll disagree with some of his decisions, I'll consider some of his public statements mere double talk and I'll criticize his questionable appointments. My job will be to hold him accountable, just like any president, and I intend to do my job.
For me, the emotion of this moment has less to do with Obama than with the nation. Now I know how some people must have felt when they heard Ronald Reagan say "it's morning again in America." The new sunshine feels warm on my face.
Thursday, November 6, 2008
Nate Silver & crew from 538 OWNED this election
Wednesday, November 5, 2008
Uncle Roger
How He Did It
And not to "belabor" the point, but Andrew posts this part again, which I have repeated on many occasions,
I wrote well over a year ago, when Obama was 20 points behind, and McCain written off:
Consider this hypothetical. It’s November 2008. A young Pakistani Muslim is watching television and sees that this man—Barack Hussein Obama—is the new face of America. In one simple image, America’s soft power has been ratcheted up not a notch, but a logarithm. A brown-skinned man whose father was an African, who grew up in Indonesia and Hawaii, who attended a majority-Muslim school as a boy, is now the alleged enemy. If you wanted the crudest but most effective weapon against the demonization of America that fuels Islamist ideology, Obama’s face gets close. It proves them wrong about what America is in ways no words can.
We don't have to imagine any more. It's happening. And the forces for good in the world have been immeasurably strengthened as a consequence.
Obama's Chili Recipe
Side note: The Ciroc Obama was good, but as Brook says, I like any drinks that are blue. :)
Bush: 'Our Long National Nightmare Of Peace And Prosperity Is Finally Over'
An excerpt:
During the 40-minute speech, Bush also promised to bring an end to the severe war drought that plagued the nation under Clinton, assuring citizens that the U.S. will engage in at least one Gulf War-level armed conflict in the next four years.
"You better believe we're going to mix it up with somebody at some point during my administration," said Bush, who plans a 250 percent boost in military spending. "Unlike my predecessor, I am fully committed to putting soldiers in battle situations. Otherwise, what is the point of even having a military?"
On the economic side, Bush vowed to bring back economic stagnation by implementing substantial tax cuts, which would lead to a recession, which would necessitate a tax hike, which would lead to a drop in consumer spending, which would lead to layoffs, which would deepen the recession even further.
ANYTHING SOUND FAMILIAR? Thank you, Bill Cook, for sennding this to me. And remember, The Onion is a parody publication.Tuesday, November 4, 2008
Ciroc Obama
Joe The Plumber Tries Voting At The Wrong Place
This Sums Up How I Feel Today
I've spent the last couple of weeks gently tweaking my panicky, paranoid liberal friends who just can't help fretting that Obama's seemingly insurmountable lead in the polls will be undone on election day. But now that the day itself has arrived, I know what they mean: Even though I don't really see any way that McCain can win this thing, I've been conditioned - by the stalemate in 2000, by the exit-polling disaster in '04, even by New Hampshire flipping for Hillary this year - to assume that some sort of bizarre election-night twist will keep us up till three AM, half-drunk and reeling. The notion of an election where the anchors know who's won by mid-afternoon, and where the suspense for television viewers ends early (when Virginia and Pennsylvania both go Obama's way, perhaps), seems like something old-fashioned, something retro, something out of my childhood that couldn't possibly happen in the crazy world of twenty-first century America. So while my rational mind expects an easy Obama win, as of this morning my irrational mind is suddenly convinced that come nine PM tonight, some furrow-browed announcer will be remarking on his this is much, much closer than anyone expected ...
12:38pm, this made me smile, though
ELECTION DAY
I just voted this morning. Then I took my mom back to register and vote (we are able to same-day register in Iowa). She wasn't showing up on the online list, so I was told she had to fill out a new registration. I arrived at the Cavalry Baptist Church, our polling center, about 9:20am. No wait; filled out the information slip, took it to the next table to be checked off the list and given a ballot; went to my "secret booth" to fill in the circles, and fed it in the optical scanner. Took less than 10 minutes, and I was voter #340. Went home, got my mom ready; took her back; they sat her down, we filled out the forms, went to the "secret booth", and she put her own ballot through the scanner; #452.
What is striking is that for both my mother and I to vote (including her registering and voting) we were in the polling place no more than 25 minutes total, between the two trips. I would gladly have waited an hour each time if it allowed the folks waiting 4,6, even 9 hours to also only have to wait an hour. What were your experiences? Please use the "comments" link below to share; I will be posting all that are emailed directly to me, also.
WE ARE MAKING HISTORY TODAY!
Monday, November 3, 2008
Barack Obama's Granmother Has Died.
This will be my last post of the night. As I said earlier, I encourage you to read "Barack Obama for President", even if you do not vote for him (but please, VOTE). It is so sad that his grandmother was so close to seeing her grandson make history, regardless of what happens tomorrow. Let's hope she'll be watching, still.
A MUST READ: View from Alaska: Big money surrounded by big wilderness
We Alaskans are not generally so magazine-pretty like her, nor are we so confrontational and vapid. Most of us don't have those peachy cheeks -- we have sunburn, windburn and frostbite. Our fingernails are dirty from actually gutting moose, not yakking about it. Our hands are chapped from picking thousands of salmon out of nets, not holding one up for the camera.
Having said that, here in Alaska we are accustomed to getting jobs we're not qualified to fill. In our far-flung villages and towns, we have big money surrounded by big wilderness; the combination causes warped career opportunities. Sort of an Edge of Nowhere phenomenon -- cousin to the Bridge to Nowhere one.
For example, in the village closest to the wilderness homestead where I was raised, I remember standing in my friend's cabin when his dad got a call on the CB radio: "People are writing you in for mayor."
The Farewell Edition: Fact Checker Wrap Up, Andrew Sullivan's Closing Arguments
Click on any one of the above pictures for the Fact Checker; but most compelling, if you have time, read Andrew Sullivan's "Barack Obama for President". It is a thoughtful (long, so print it out!) heartfelt closing argument for the choice we have to make as a nation tomorrow.
New ad from www.progressivefuture.org. Brook said I had to post it, so here you go.
Sunday, November 2, 2008
McCain Gets Mean
Specter, the senior senator from Pennsylvania, was talking about his "sense" that Election Day in his state was going to be a rude awakening for Democrats, despite weeks of polls showing Republicans lagging far behind in this former swing state. That's when he let loose with his reason for optimism:
There are a "couple of hidden factors" in this election, said Specter. "The first is that people answer pollsters one way, but in the secrecy of the ballot booth, vote the other way."
Yes. That is what he said, to a chorus of hopeful affirmation. Arlen Specter was openly -- in public, into a microphone -- crossing his fingers, and hoping for racism.
Saturday, November 1, 2008
White Racists and Anti-Semites for Obama
"White people are faced with either a negro or a total nutter who happens to have a pale face. Personally I'd prefer the negro."
But there's more....
A Scary Halooween with Sarah Palin
One of the many things that had 84-year-old World War II veteran John H. Gay on edge was worry for Sarah Palin's safety. "She's a brave woman, an old-fashioned American woman who's not afraid to have kids," said Gay. "She's one of the bravest women around, and someone might just assassinate her." But he was tormented by images of a fantastical Stalinoid world to come. According to Gay, Obama believes the communist "mantra" "from each according to his abilities, and to each according to his needs"; that "if we go the socialist way, you young people will lose all your freedoms -- mentally, physically and religiously."
As he envisioned a possible future under Obama, he spoke of scarce hot water and hulking Soviet-era high-rises of the sort that ring Moscow.
Friday, October 31, 2008
An Examination of Obama’s Use of Hidden Hypnosis Techniques in His Speeches.
Obama draws crowd of 25,000 in Des Moines today
"On the day of the Iowa caucuses, my faith in the American people was vindicated and what you started here in Iowa has swept the nation," Obama told a crowd his campaign said totaled about 25,000 in a downtown park under a warm fall sun.
"A couple of elections ago, there was a presidential candidate who decried this kind of politics and condemned these kinds of tactics. And I admired him for it. He said, 'I will not take the low road to the highest office in this land.' Those words were spoken eight years ago by my opponent, John McCain," he said. "But the high road didn't lead him to the White House then, so this time, he decided to take a different route."
Obama also criticized a new McCain ad that shows the Democratic nominee in the past praising McCain and Sen. Joseph Lieberman for their work on global warming.
"As if there's something wrong with acknowledging when an opponent has said or done something that makes sense," Obama said. "I do that all the time....I think we need more of that attitude in Washington. We need more civility in Washington. I don't disagree with Senator McCain on everything. I respect his occasional displays of independence."
Left two photos: Linda Turner, Right photo: Don Abbott
Thursday, October 30, 2008
Wednesday, October 29, 2008
Apparently McCain "funds radicals" too.
Rob Hubler, the Democratic challenger to Steve King, Iowa's Finest
What McCain Defectors See in Obama
DPA Ban may be adding to Financial Crisis
Sorry for the long post; but this is something near and dear to me and my business. The largest company participating in "DPA", or Down-payment assistance, was Nehemiah. How it worked: FHA requires a 3% downpayment. The seller was able to, at closing, "donate" 3% of their sale proceeds to the non-profit (i.e., Nehemiah). Upon signing an agreement, the non-profit would gift the 3% downpayment to the buyer. The seller then had agreed to donate that same amount, plus a fee, to the entity at the time of closing. Because the seller has to take less for the house to be able to do it, and the listing price of the property is not to be raised to cover it; it was a way for sellers to accommodate a buyer and sell a property that may have otherwise taken longer to sell.
DPA Ban May Be Adding to Crisis
By Amilda Dymi, National Mortgage News
WASHINGTON-A bigger financial crisis has overshadowed the underlying risk and long-term implications of thinning affordable housing options due to limited credit and higher downpayment requirements.
Meanwhile, a controversial ban on seller-funded downpayment assistance took effect on Oct. 1, adding to the overall crisis.
It may seem fair Congress did not spare time to review the FHA Seller-Financed Downpayment Reform and Risk-Based Pricing Authorization Act of 2008 (H.R. 6694), which would restore DPA indefinitely.
The ban is based on HUD claims that DPA programs contribute to higher default rates and could potentially result in having to offset the risk by tapping into its reserves, a claim long disputed by DPA providers and industry members. Not only six hours after the ban took effect, the Congressional Budget Office issued a report that says seller-financed DPA loans insured by the FHA generate homeownership at no cost to the U.S. government for at least the next five years thanks to its self-funding mechanism.
"All of this substantive opposition to DPA has been taken off the table," said Scott Syphax, president and CEO of Nehemiah Corp. of America, the country's largest DPA provider.
Bipartisan bill H.R. 6694 introduced by Reps. Al Green, D-Texas, Gary Miller, D-Calif., Christopher Shays, R-Conn., and Maxine Waters, D-Calif., in July was based on DPA industry data and independent report findings.
As the ban took effect on Oct. 1, Rep. Green stressed that as DPA is eliminated to comply with the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008, Congress needs to recognize it helped transform lives without spending a single taxpayer dollar.
In addition, "the Congressional Budget Office estimates that seller-financed DPA will generate $65 million over the next five years and save taxpayers $13 million next year." H.R. 6694 will create a new DPA "under new standards that will effectively balance the risk of potential foreclosures with the goal of increasing homeownership," he said.
Moreover, the bailout bill (H.R. 3997, the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008) designed to aid Wall Street avert a serious recession does not offer a direct solution to a potentially more severe crisis within the affordable housing market.
Commenting on H.R. 3997, Mr. Syphax said a provision within the bailout to reinstate DPA "could help ensure continued liquidity in the stagnating housing market by providing aid to an estimated 600,000 working-class people for home purchases next year, generating $150 billion in home sales."
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
LET'S PUT SOCIALISM TO REST
During the 2000 campaign, on MSNBC’s “Hardball,” a young woman asked him why her father, a doctor, should be “penalized” by being “in a huge tax bracket.” McCain replied that “wealthy people can afford more” and that “the very wealthy, because they can afford tax lawyers and all kinds of loopholes, really don’t pay nearly as much as you think they do.” The exchange continued:
YOUNG WOMAN: Are we getting closer and closer to, like, socialism and stuff?. . .
MCCAIN: Here’s what I really believe: That when you reach a certain level of comfort, there’s nothing wrong with paying somewhat more.
For her part, Sarah Palin, who has lately taken to calling Obama “Barack the Wealth Spreader,” seems to be something of a suspect character herself. She is, at the very least, a fellow-traveller of what might be called socialism with an Alaskan face. The state that she governs has no income or sales tax. Instead, it imposes huge levies on the oil companies that lease its oil fields. The proceeds finance the government’s activities and enable it to issue a four-figure annual check to every man, woman, and child in the state. One of the reasons Palin has been a popular governor is that she added an extra twelve hundred dollars to this year’s check, bringing the per-person total to $3,269. A few weeks before she was nominated for Vice-President, she told a visiting journalist—Philip Gourevitch, of this magazine—that “we’re set up, unlike other states in the union, where it’s collectively Alaskans own the resources. So we share in the wealth when the development of these resources occurs.” Perhaps there is some meaningful distinction between spreading the wealth and sharing it (“collectively,” no less), but finding it would require the analytic skills of Karl the Marxist. ♦
Click title for full article; and note: emphasis, mine. (The argument that Obama is giving money TO PEOPLE THAT DO NOT PAY TAXES AT ALL, is not true, as it implies people that do not work at all are receiving benefits. Only workers that pay payroll taxes would receive the credit, as it is an income tax credit, not a direct handout. In Alaska, every man, woman and child received $3,269 this year; EVEN those that don't work at all. What exactly is that?
This is just fun: www.palinaspresident.us
Newest Florida Mailing
Monday, October 27, 2008
Voter Suppression in Virginia
Voters are getting calls that threaten criminal charges if they show up to vote, and in Hampton Roads a phony flier tells Democrats and Independents voting for Democrats that an emergency legislative session has split election day into two; and they are to vote November 5th.
Infighting, Jumping Ship, and Dead Horses
Everyone has a right to their beliefs; but to say that questioning your candidate is blasphemy is the makings of a fine dictatorship. While Andrew Sullivan is whole-heartedly behind Senator Obama, (I encourage you to read the linked piece of his) Daniel Larison, at American Conservative Magazine, is most definitely NOT. But he, in my opinion, is correct in pointing out that the GOP is not what it once was; fiscal conservancy, reduced government, strong military. It has become the captive of the "neocons', the far Christian right. But the current party has strayed from that; but better to hear that from a committed conservative:
Daniel Larison:
Having defended and enabled Mr. Bush for years, many of the recent ship-jumpers and critics of Palin finally declared that enough was enough, while some conservatives who have had more problems with the administration have decided that what is needed is more party loyalty and sycophancy focused now on Palin instead of Bush. When it is pointed out that this is self-defeating and actually makes more “purist” conservative arguments more politically irrelevant than ever, there is a flood of anathemas. (click here for full article)
I came back to this after reading a post from Ross Douthat. He does not think that conservatives/Republicans should vote for Barack Obama our of a jumping on the bandwagon mentality, but rather, decries the infighting that is going on, which IS MY POINT.
Ross Douthat: (click here for full post)
The bigger point (and I know I'm a broken record here) is this. Whatever direction you think conservatism should be going in from here on out, the absolute worst thing the members of a losing political movement can do - if they ever want to win again, at least - is attempt to pre-emptively close off debate about the movement's future. Conservatives need to have arguments, not promise excommunications, or else pretty soon there won't be very much worth arguing over.
The Top Ten Reasons Conservatives Should Vote For Obama
10. A body blow to racial identity politics. An end to the era of Jesse Jackson in black America.
9. Less debt. Yes, Obama will raise taxes on those earning over a quarter of a million. And he will spend on healthcare, Iraq, Afghanistan and the environment. But so will McCain. He plans more spending on health, the environment and won't touch defense of entitlements. And his refusal to touch taxes means an extra $4 trillion in debt over the massive increase presided over by Bush. And the CBO estimates that McCain's plans will add more to the debt over four years than Obama's. Fiscal conservatives have a clear choice.
8. A return to realism and prudence in foreign policy. Obama has consistently cited the foreign policy of George H. W. Bush as his inspiration. McCain's knee-jerk reaction to the Georgian conflict, his commitment to stay in Iraq indefinitely, and his brinksmanship over Iran's nuclear ambitions make him a far riskier choice for conservatives. The choice between Obama and McCain is like the choice between George H.W. Bush's first term and George W.'s.
7. An ability to understand the difference between listening to generals and delegating foreign policy to them.
6. Temperament. Obama has the coolest, calmest demeanor of any president since Eisenhower. Conservatism values that kind of constancy, especially cmopared with the hot-headed, irrational impulsiveness of McCain.
5. Faith. Obama's fusion of Christianity and reason, his non-fundamentalist faith, is a critical bridge between the new atheism and the new Christianism.
CLICK HERE FOR THE REST:
Drudge Report: Wrong about Obama "Redistribution of Wealth" from 2001
UPDATE:
FACTCHECKER JUST DEALT WITH THIS (QUICKLY, AS THE 2001 SUPREME COURT ISSUE JUST STARTED MAKING THE ROUNDS TODAY: THEIR CONCLUSION:
The Pinocchio Test
With very few exceptions, all American politicians, including both presidential candidates, are in favor of a progressive income tax system and welfare policies (such as Medicare and Social Security) that "redistribute wealth." Barack Obama is more enthusiastic about "spreading the wealth around" than his Republican rival. But that does not make him a "Socialist." The McCain camp is wrong to suggest that the Illinois senator advocated an "wealth redistribution" role for the Supreme Court in his 2001 interview.
TWO PINOCCHIOS
Amazon Had Obama Mask Listed As A "Terrorist Costume"
Economy Down, Gun Sales Up.
Americans have cut back on buying cars, furniture and clothes in a tough economy, but there's one consumer item that's still enjoying healthy sales: guns. Purchases of firearms and ammunition have risen 8 to 10 percent this year, according to state and federal data.
"I think right now people are scared Obama is going to take their rights away," said Margaret Marcus, who was carrying a Glock 19 9mm semiautomatic pistol under a blue jean jacket embroidered with "Winnie the Pooh" characters. "He's definitely anti-gun, despite what you see in the mainstream media."
Sunday, October 26, 2008
Obama's Inaugural Speech Is Not Already Written
CBS is now reporting that the Obama campaign says the charge is completely false. As Matthew Yglesias says, it's also true that the charge is completely false. Anyone who has heard Senator Obama speak in the last 2 weeks knows; he's not taking anything for granted.
Sen. McCain describes himself as a maverick, by which he seems to mean that he spent 25 years trying unsuccessfully to persuade his own party to follow his bipartisan, centrist lead. Sadly, maverick John McCain didn't show up for the campaign. Instead we have candidate McCain, who embraces the extreme Republican orthodoxy he once resisted and cynically asks Americans to buy for another four years.
Yet despite her formidable gifts, few who have worked closely with the governor would argue she is truly ready to assume command of the most important, powerful nation on earth. To step in and juggle the demands of an economic meltdown, two deadly wars and a deteriorating climate crisis would stretch the governor beyond her range. Like picking Sen. McCain for president, putting her one 72-year-old heartbeat from the leadership of the free world is just too risky at this time.
Click here for full article.
How Do You Feel About This?
Last week, Julie Hensley made one of her thousands of phone calls on behalf of Barack Obama. A woman answered. As Hensley ran through her short script, the husband impatiently broke in.
"Ma'am, we're voting for the n***er." And hung up.
Hensley wasn't having it. "I went and made a couple other calls but chafed over this absurdity," she told us, "so I called them back, as I still had a couple questions for the wife." This time the man answered, asked pointedly who she was, and when she replied he hung up again.
As for Hensley, her story ended with a twist. A couple hours later during a pause in her dials, her phone rang. She recognized the number. "This is going to be good," she remembers thinking, getting ready to scrap.
It was the husband. He was calling for the woman on whom he'd hung up. She then got something she didn't expect -- an apology. Calmly, Hensley told the man she'd accept his apology on one condition -- he had to tell her who he was voting for.
"Oh, I don't normally talk about it but I feel like I owe you," the man said. "I am voting for Senator Obama." He asked if Hensley would like to speak to his wife, as he'd interrupted the original call. Hensley mentioned that she had been surprised when he'd called to apologize. Apparently the husband and wife had been talking the entire couple hours since the original call. "Did she get upset with you?" Hensley asked.
"What do you think?" the man replied.
Eleven days.
Saturday, October 25, 2008
McCain Today.
And so much for regulation:
McCain calls for "less government regulation" of small businesses.
Wow.
If McCain wins ALL of these: FLORIDA, OHIO, INDIANA, PENNSYLVANIA, MISSOURI and NORTH CAROLINA; it's 270 Obama to 268 McCain. www.270towin.com has Obama at 277 now, giving him Pennsylvania, not even calling that a swing state. So to flip that to McCain, and give him FL, OH, IN, MO and NC still isn't enough, he'd need Nevada also. Wow.
An Appaling Comparison
One response to the ridiculous cover of the latest issue of The Weekly Standard should be digust for the shameless adaptation of an iconic image from the Tiananmen Square massacre for the purposes of shilling for an awful candidate in a democratic election, but it seems to me that this might take TWS‘ democracy-promoting ideology and its alleged support for democratic dissidents far more seriously than they deserve. Of course it should go without saying that it is ludicrous and obnoxious to portray the frontrunner in a reasonably free and open election in the role of the Chinese military squashing the democracy activists of 1989, but then I expect that there is a nontrivial percentage of McCain supporters who think that the comparison is quite apt.
McCain is not standing alone in the path of a tank; he is not a valiant martyr to the rights of conscience and political expression. He is likely to be the runner-up in a large-scale contest for supreme power, and he will lose because most people in this country do not trust him or any other member of his party with that kind of power any longer. The perversity of comparing a man of his wealth and power, who seeks even more power, to a lone dissident engaged in futile resistance against overwhelming force is amazing. This certainly says something about that magazine’s respect for real dissidents in systems where contested and competitive elections essentially free of political violence are not possible. An example of real political dissent and courage is appropriated here for McCain to provide some lustre to the fading reputation of a dangerous and misguided politician.
More Palin
This should scare most of you:
Religious leaders in Alaska, including Mr. Donelson, (a pastor and Palin appointee, who helped found the "spiritual warfare" ministry) declined interviews, with several saying they had been told by the McCain-Palin campaign not to talk to members of the news media.
What is known, however, is that Ms. Palin has had long associations with religious leaders who practice a particularly assertive and urgent brand of Pentecostalism known as “spiritual warfare. ”Its adherents believe that demonic forces can colonize specific geographic areas and individuals, and that “spiritual warriors” must “battle” them to assert God’s control, using prayer and evangelism. The movement’s fixation on demons, its aggressiveness and its leaders’ claims to exalted spiritual authority have troubled even some Pentecostal Christians.
Bruce Wilson, a researcher for Talk2Action, a Web site that tracks religious groups, said: “One of the imperatives of the movement is to achieve worldly power, including political control. Then you can more effectively drive out the demons. The ultimate goal is to purify the earth.”
The full New York Times story.
Here is a link to "Spiritual Warfare & Deliverance Ministries".
And, so much for getting all "mavericky" on "reform".
McCain Adviser on Palin: She's "Going Rogue"
"She is a diva. She takes no advice from anyone," said this McCain adviser. "She does not have any relationships of trust with any of us, her family or anyone else. Also, she is playing for her own future and sees herself as the next leader of the party. Remember: Divas trust only unto themselves, as they see themselves as the beginning and end of all wisdom."
Click here for full story.
Friday, October 24, 2008
Is It the Speechwriters? The Science Experts? Are there experts?
10/24/08: Joe Lieberman, answering Connecticut reporters as to whether Sarah Palin is ready to be president right when elected.
OBAMA IS NOT A SOCIALIST (From a conservative. really).
Thursday, October 23, 2008
A Wonderful Collection of Campaign Photos
This Is A Post From Ta-Nehisi Coates Today: What $150k Could Have Purchased
What if the Tables Were Turned???
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Alamo chairwoman writes letter stating Obama is a Muslim socialist
The Empress's New Clothes
Larison: Redistribution of Wealth
Michelle Bachmann...... Go Elwyn Tinklenberg! (Tied to the GOP? Go Aubrey Immelman!)
On Hardball, Michelle Bachmann recommended that Senator Obama be investigated for his anti-American views. Actually, all the Democrats in Congress should be investigated, she further said. Then, she denies it. Note to self: If someone is filming you saying something, then you can't deny later that you said it. Really.
Another Pic
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
Barack Obama's grandparents. The people he was raised by in Hawaii. Madelyn started as a bank teller in Honolulu, and in the 1970's became one of the first female bank vice presidents.
A Daily Dish reader wrote in to say how she saw a striking resemblance between Barack and his maternal grandfather. (The tilt of the head, ears, face shape, etc).
David Sedaris
I didn’t vote again until 1976, when I was nineteen and legally registered. Because I was at college out of state, I sent my ballot through the mail. The choice that year was between Jimmy Carter and Gerald Ford. Most of my friends were going for Carter, but, as an art major, I identified myself as a maverick. “That means an original,” I told my roommate. “Someone who lets the chips fall where they may.” Because I made my own rules and didn’t give a damn what anyone else thought of them, I decided to write in the name of Jerry Brown, who, it was rumored, liked to smoke pot. This was an issue very close to my heart—too close, obviously, as it amounted to a complete waste. Still, though, it taught me a valuable lesson: calling yourself a maverick is a sure sign that you’re not one.
Monday, October 20, 2008
McCain Seems To Be Giving Up On Colorado
CNN's John King reports that the Republican team is "making tough decisions" as it sees Colorado as well as New Mexico and Iowa drift away.
Says the campaign's "risky strategy" is counting on Florida, Nevada, North Carolina, Ohio, Virginia, and a comeback in Pennsylvania.
Obama To Suspend Campaign This Week
THREE PINOCHIOS
It is unclear whether either presidential candidate will actually keep their many promises on taxes. But the McCain claim his rival's current plan will force "folks like Joe" to subsidize welfare checks to non-tax-payers does not stand up to serious scrutiny. The McCain campaign has erected a bogus straw man argument with its claim that Obama has promised "to cut income taxes for 95 percent of Americans."
Obama's Misleading Ad on Medicare
UPDATE: 9:44pm, I just saw a revised ad this evening from Obama; now citing (and showing the article from) The New York Times, saying that McCain will cut Medicare benefits. Still, this has been disproven for the most part; so there has to be a better (and more honest) way to get the point across.
Daniel Drezner on Palin and McCain's Own VP Pick
The Odd Lies of Sarah Palin II
Sunday, October 19, 2008
A FiveThirtyEight.com reader comments on the Powell news
I have to say that I've had zero respect for Powell ever since the Iraq invasion and his role in it and his equivocating, unsubstantial commentary on that and everything else since then. However, I'm not easily emotional but had tears running down my face today when he spoke of the mother at her son's grave in Arlington. What a shame the Republican party is to demonize and denigrate one's faith. What Powell said today about that would have been enough for me to say he has redeemed himself. He said that and a lot more of course and I'm sure HE is glad that Obama came along to allow him an opportunity to redeem himself in they eyes of many Americans."
REMEMBER THE WARNINGS. IT'S NOT OVER, AND THERE ARE CARDS LEFT TO PLAY.
With McCain refusing to denounce the Robocalls designed to scare voters into believing Senator Obama is a terrorist; and with the "Bradley effect" commentary refusing to die; be prepared for radical attacks that with so little time left in the campaign; will have very little chance for rebuttal. I do believe that the Obama campaign has something big up it's sleeve, still... Obama said a couple of weeks ago; "We don't throw the first punch, but we'll throw the last". I am sure the McCain campaign realizes that they had gone too far; and the ominous tones of the rallies were showing that, clearly. While they've dramatically backed off; the fact that McCain allowed and is now supporting the Robocalls, to the rebuke of Colin Powell this morning. He also spoke eloquently about the Muslim issue specifically.
I want to mention something else, which I will cover more in the coming week. HAVING A DEMOCRATIC MAJORITY IN CONGRESS AND PRESIDENCY is no where near as one sided as the fact that the next President could possibly be replacing two moderate/liberal Supreme Court Justices. The average tenure of a SCOTUS judge has been 16 years in the 1970',s but has grown to 26.1 years. That is a staggering figure. The Supreme Court needs to be balanced, and right now; we have 4 conservatives, 3 liberals, one Bush Sr. appointee (Souter, 1990) that has been fairly moderate-liberal; and one swing voter: Kennedy.
Conservatives will argue against a balance; but that's not something they likely will campaign on; because it can bring the imbalance to the Democrat's attention. The two justices likely to retire soon; Ruth Bader-Ginsberg and John Paul Stevens are 75 and 88, respectively. I know this has been mentioned, but Colin Powell brought it up today with his endorsement, and while "justice is blind", we know Justices, aren't.
UPDATE: HERE IS THE SPEECH OUTSIDE TO THE PRESS; IN SOME WAYS MORE POWERFUL THAN THE ENDORSEMENT ITSELF ON MEET THE PRESS.